Watch the Difference 20 Years Has Made to Car Crash Safety
Released on 02/02/2017
[Narrator] Watching car crash tests
is horrifying and mesmerizing, in equal measure.
Here, we're seeing the difference that two decades
of ever-improving car design has made to safety.
Europe's Car Safety Assessment Program, Euro NCAP,
is 20 years old, and to mark the occasion,
it staged a test.
It put a Rover 100 from 1997
up against its modern city car equivalent, the Honda Jazz,
and pitted both of them against a metal barrier
at 40 miles an hour.
Although it has seemingly modern safety features
like airbags, the Rover 100 earned
just one star out of five.
The driver dummy rattles around the inflated bag.
His legs would have been crushed.
He may have suffered head injuries,
and the body and door of the car are so twisted,
it might be tough to get him out.
The Honda Jazz driving dummy fares much better.
Improvements in the structure of the car and tech,
like side curtain airbags, keep him in place and protected.
That car gets five stars.
In the U.S., the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety,
or IIHS, painted a more dramatic picture
of car safety evolution when it smashed
a 1959 Chevrolet Bel Air into a 2009 Chevy Malibu.
Both end up looking like mangled metal,
but the newer car disperses the energy
of the impact in a totally different way.
Instead of a steering column slamming into his body,
the driver of the Malibu gets cushioned and contained.
Now that they're nearly out of places to stuff more airbags,
engineers are focused on active safety,
using tools like automatic braking
to dodge crashes in the first place.
Until computer-controlled self-driving cars
can actually deliver on the promise
of making all crashes a thing of the past,
trials like these are the best tools
automotive designers have to test the machines
supposed to keep us safe.
And these head-to-heads show their efforts are working.
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